Inside
the week that changed French politics forever
An
unprecedented crisis laid bare Emmanuel Macron’s flaws, exacerbated the risk of
a sovereign debt disaster, and thrust the far right closer to power than ever
before.
October
13, 2025 4:00 am CET
By Joshua
Berlinger, Clea Caulcutt, Pauline de Saint Remy, Elisa Bertholomey and Giorgio
Leali
https://www.politico.eu/article/the-week-that-shook-france-emmanuel-macron-sebastien-lecornu-crisis/
PARIS —
French President Emmanuel Macron had three simple questions for the political
leaders who gathered at the Elysée Palace last Friday in search of a solution
to the most acute crisis of his tenure.
Who wants
to avoid a dissolution of parliament? Will you support the government? And what
are you willing to compromise on?
The
answers spell trouble for the embattled president’s future after a five-day
debacle that saw the resignation of Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu’s
government just 14 hours after it was named, and culminated in his
reappointment. It was a political drama the likes of which the country has
rarely seen, and going into a new week it seems far from resolved.
Nothing
institutionally obliged Macron to place himself at the center of the Oct. 10
talks, which Lecornu had been leading and which in hindsight appeared to have
been meant to lay the groundwork for the prime minister’s renomination later
that evening. When asked why his office convened the meeting, a presidential
adviser joked: “Maybe he wants to win the Nobel War Prize.”
Members
of the opposition who received the invitation, which was sent out at 2 a.m.,
mostly agreed to attend the high-stakes, closed-door meeting at the Elysée to
ensure they were seen as serious about finding a negotiated solution to the
impasse.
And so
the leaders of most of the country’s major political parties — except the
hard-left France Unbowed and the far-right National Rally, who weren’t invited
— made their way past the gates of the Elysée, up the courtyard past a throng
of journalists, and into the 18th century hôtel particulier that Macron and his
wife Brigitte call home.
Before
entering the Salon des Ambassadeurs, an elegant meeting room overlooking the
presidential residence’s pristine terrace and impeccably manicured garden, the
attendees were asked to place their phones in a box — an extra precaution to
ensure no information leaked.
Macron
opened his meeting with the three questions and listened attentively, according
to someone in the room who, like others quoted in this piece, was granted
anonymity to speak candidly.
Representatives
from the Socialist Party refused to support Macron’s next government. The heads
of Les Républicains, the conservative party that had been part of a minority
government with Macron’s camp for the past year, said their support would be
contingent on not touching the controversial law that raised the retirement
age. Edouard Philippe, Macron’s first prime minister who leads a party that has
consistently backed the president, remained mostly quiet and did not appear to
commit one way or the other.
The only
people to raise their hands, according to Socialist Party leader Olivier Faure,
were Gabriel Attal, who leads Macron’s centrist political party, and Marc
Fesneau, the president’s former agriculture minister who is part of a different
centrist party.
It was a
remarkable display of Macron’s isolation.
Eight
years into his presidency, with so many bridges burned and allies spurned, the
gathering within the gilded walls of Salon des Ambassadeurs likely exacerbated
the situation.
Macron
may have remained mostly silent throughout that meeting — he has still not
publicly addressed the crisis either — but as the discussion dragged on, it
became increasingly clear that Lecornu’s renomination was in the cards.
Perhaps
it shouldn’t have been a surprise.
Those who
know the president like to compare him to an inveterate gambler who is always
convinced he’s just a win away from taking down the house, no matter how many
losses came before.
The
problem for Macron is that his eventual decision to renominate Lecornu, which
didn’t excite even supporters like Attal and Fesneau, sharpens criticism that
he is committing democratic malpractice by refusing to concede power and name a
PM from outside his ranks after losing last summer’s snap election.
Members
of the left-leaning opposition departed Friday’s meeting “dumbfounded,”
according to the head of the Greens, furious that despite Macron’s notable
silence on his plans, signs were pointing to Lecornu’s reappointment.
Now
Lecornu must convince lawmakers not to torpedo his government (again) and
instead help him to get the country’s fractured legislature to agree to the
billions of euros in cuts that are needed to rein in France’s budget deficit,
which is set to hit 5.4 percent of gross domestic product this year.
Macron
and Lecornu must also reassure external observers that the world’s
seventh-largest economy can pay its bills and stave off a debt crisis,
questions that on Monday grew from whispers to frank conversations. After
Lecornu’s resignation, the benchmark French stock index slumped as much as 3
percent on the news while 10-year borrowing costs lurched to their highest
level for the year. Even the euro fell by over half a cent against the dollar.
The five
days that led to Lecornu’s reappointment have changed French politics. They
will leave an indelible stain on Macron’s legacy and add rocket fuel to a
populist movement already enjoying unprecedented levels of support.
The
consequences of what comes next are enormous, for France and for Europe.
The
missed call
For the
leader of the conservatives, Bruno Retailleau, the crisis began with a missed
call. Retailleau knew something was amiss when he couldn’t get hold of Lecornu
on Sunday, the day the new government was set to be unveiled.
Ignoring
a major player like Retailleau was a risky move given his recent meteoric rise
to the halls of power, and both sides likely knew it.
After
failing for most of his career to shed the bookish reputation that his short,
rail-thin stature and circular glasses invited, Retailleau got a late-in-life
shot at frontline politics after being named interior minister in September
2024. That was the month his party, Les Républicains, emerged from the
political backwaters to join Macron’s centrists in a surprise minority
coalition following a summer snap election that delivered a hung parliament.
Retailleau’s
anti-immigration bent and support for economic liberalism made him the man for
the moment as France and Europe shifted to the political right. When the time
came for Les Républicains, the ideological successors to Charles de Gaulle, to
hold new leadership elections this year, the interior minister won in a
landslide.
Retailleau’s
party had been expected to remain in government under Lecornu, who had been a
member of Les Républicains until he joined Macron’s movement at its founding in
2017. During his tenure as armed forces minister before being elevated to the
premiership, Lecornu reportedly enjoyed a good relationship with the
conservatives.
Continuing
the partnership seemed natural. So why wasn’t Lecornu picking up his
phone?
Retailleau
told a small group of reporters that in the leadup to Oct. 5, the evening the
doomed government was announced, he had spent a week trying extract information
about the next government from the PM’s advisers.
With the
clock ticking and answers elusive, Retailleau jumped in his car and headed
straight to the Matignon Palace, the prime minister’s residence. When he
arrived, Lecornu was surrounded by aides and looked busy.
“I told
him it was urgent, and he took me aside very briefly,” Retailleau said.
During
that conversation, which lasted more than an hour and was interrupted several
times by calls with the French president, Lecornu showed him a draft cabinet
list.
“There
was a blank next to the armed forces,” Retailleau said. The interior minister
said Lecornu responded that it was the president’s decision.
Retailleau
didn’t find out until the government was unveiled on television that Macron had
picked Bruno Le Maire, another Les Républicains alumnus who had jumped ship for
Macron’s centrist movement, as armed forces minister. Since leaving office in
2024 Le Maire has become a scapegoat for France’s deteriorating financial
health, and many in Retailleau’s camp regard the former finance minister as
politically toxic.
Macron’s
camp knew Le Maire would be a controversial pick, and at least one of Lecornu’s
advisers had tried to talk the president out of it an hour before. When Macron
responded by saying you don’t change a government at the last minute, the
adviser retorted: “An hour before Hiroshima, Hiroshima hadn’t happened.”
For Les
Républicains, Le Maire seemed to be the final straw. An adviser to Retailleau
said the party “felt we’d been taken for a ride” considering Lecornu’s promise
from his first day on the job to “break” with his two predecessors, who had
been toppled trying to get lawmakers to agree on slimmed-down budgets.
Some
minutes later, Retailleau dropped a bombshell post on X saying that his party
would meet the next morning to discuss his participation in the government. The
message was interpreted as a sign that he was preparing to leave.
Lecornu
resigned the next morning, and Paris joked that the conservative leader had
brought down the government with a tweet.
A walk to
remember
Lecornu
has yet to give his account of this fateful meeting with Retailleau, but his
office did not deny Retailleau’s account. When asked about the falling-out with
Les Républicains later in the week, Lecornu merely said that discussions over
the new government had not been “fluid.” He had previously blamed his
government’s downfall on “partisan appetites” linked to the presidential
election.
Many
centrists believe Retailleau’s outburst was driven by pressure from the more
radical grassroots of the party. Others have postulated that Retailleau needed
to break with Macron at some point if he wants to run for president in 2027, as
he is widely expected to do. The relationship between the two men was already
on the rocks after the interior minister said in an interview that Macron’s
political movement would end the moment the president’s career was over.
Once the
news of the resignation broke, disbelief rippled through Paris and beyond. One
ambassador in the French capital got the news from an intern who piped up to
say, “I think you should look at this,” while he and his advisers were
leisurely planning their week.
A
European Parliament adviser on the fast train to Strasbourg got a 10-minute
heads-up from Paris. When his colleagues found out they opined: “What a mess.”
The onus
to do something seemed to fall on Macron, and many expected something bold.
Instead, the French president went for a solitary walk on the banks of the
Seine, much of the time with a phone glued to his ear.
Cameras
captured him in a dark overcoat, pacing the grey flagstones on the quais,
stopping occasionally to talk to passers-by as French markets tumbled and the
country panicked.
Despite
the crisis, it was business as usual, an anticlimactic return to the status
quo.
Macron
later attended a Légion d’honneur ceremony at the Elysée and appeared “very
smiling and professional,” according to a participant.
A former
adviser explained that Macron “hates being on the back foot.”
“He
doesn’t like to be overtaken by events,” the adviser added.
Bucking
expectations that Macron would have to address the nation or do something
dramatic, that evening the French president gave Lecornu, whose resignation he
had just accepted, 48 hours to chart a path forward — an extremely unusual task
for an outgoing head of government.
Abandon
ship
Macron’s
allies have stuck with him through many crises, but the Lecornu debacle seemed
the final straw for many.
Gabriel
Attal, one of Macron’s previous prime ministers and now the leader of his
party, looked exasperated during an appearance on national television Monday
night, saying he “no longer understands” the president’s decisions.
Edouard
Philippe, Macron’s first prime minister and a key ally, called on Tuesday
morning for the French president to step down after the 2026 budget was done.
(Philippe has already declared his candidacy in the next presidential
election.)
Comments
from another former PM, Elisabeth Borne, seemed to fit the bill at first.
Borne, who led the government when it rammed through the unpopular measure that
raised the age of retirement, came out in favor of suspending the law. She told
Le Parisien in an interview published Tuesday evening that it was “important to
know when to listen and move” — a jaw-dropping comment considering how she and
Macron were accused of ignoring the widespread opposition to the law.
But
Borne, who had returned to government as education minister and is still very
much in the loop, may have been playing another game. When considered in light
of the news that Lecornu had asked the Economy Ministry to estimate how much it
would cost to suspend the retirement reform, it suggests a willingness by
Macron and Lecornu to play ball with the Socialists.
Lecornu’s
two-day deadline to find a solution was up on Wednesday evening. He presented
his findings to Macron at the Elysée before heading to the studios of French
public broadcaster France 2 for a primetime interview.
The
then-outgoing prime minister expressed optimism that a path forward, while
difficult, was still possible. He hinted that Macron could name a new head of
government in the next 48 hours, which the Elysée confirmed the president would
do later that evening. He also tried to tamp down speculation that he’d be
reappointed.
If the
Socialists had gotten their hopes up Wednesday evening, it didn’t last long.
Emerging from talks with Lecornu on Thursday, party leaders complained the PM
had remained sphinxlike during their conversation and dismissed talk of
suspending the pensions reforms as a possible red herring.
“Lecornu
was unreadable,” said Maxime Sauvage, the Socialist Party’s National Assembly
general secretary after the meeting.
Another
Socialist official who is close to the party’s leadership said the party
realized Macron wouldn’t stoop to appointing a left-wing PM because he would
regard it as the “the ultimate defeat.”
“Fundamentally
those around still think we are irresponsible nitwits,” the official said.
The flirt
with the Socialists seemed to leave Retailleau and his conservatives cornered,
grappling with the possibility that a week that began with a tantrum over the
composition of the government could end with Macron’s handing power to the
left. Retailleau and another powerful conservative, Senate President Gérard
Larcher, tried in vain to convince them to nominate Jean-Louis Borloo, a
center-right former minister who had been out of politics for more than a
decade.
A close
ally of the president last week described the strategy as one of brinkmanship.
But Macron has been in office for eight years now, and everyone knows of his
tendency to play politics like a game of poker.
Few were
surprised when the president called party leaders to the Elysée to close out
the week and then, for the duration of the meeting, kept his cards close to his
chest, reportedly offering a limited concession on retirement form and then
reappointing Lecornu hours later.
Macron’s
tragedy
The
tragedy for Emmanuel Macron is that time has proven him right on several
proposals that seemed controversial at first, especially in the realm of
geopolitics.
Macron
started pushing as early as 2017 for a strategically autonomous Europe Union,
making the bloc more self-sufficient economically and in defense. He was also
widely panned for talking about European boots on the ground in Ukraine a year
before the formation of the Franco-British coalition of the willing.
“Not many
leaders are willing and able to think five or even two years ahead,” an EU
diplomat said. “He was so good at doing that.”
Perhaps
time will prove him right on retirement reform, as France’s population grays
and the economics of the pension system become more untenable as more baby
boomers retire.
It
matters little in the short term.
The
week’s chaos was a gift to the far right and to Le Pen, its longtime leader,
who claims mainstream political parties are out of touch and have driven France
to the edge of collapse.
Le Pen
and her party are calling for a snap elections, despite questions over whether
she could even run in the contest after being found guilty of embezzlement
earlier this year. She has denied wrongdoing and an appeal trial is set for
January.
Lecornu’s
odds of failure, with the Socialist Party still wielding the threat of a
no-confidence vote, seem higher than ever before. Should he be toppled, Macron
may be left with no other choice but to send voters back to the ballot box at a
time when European populists are racking up victories from Prague to Portugal.
Though
France’s two-round runoff system makes it difficult to predict how polling
translates into wins at the ballot box, one recent survey showed that in a
hypothetical new legislative election, nearly 50 percent of voters would opt
for the extremes at either end of the political spectrum. The National Rally is
currently polling at around 33 percent (a level similar to what it got in last
year’s legislative election), making it the country’s most popular political
party.
The far
right’s policies may be controversial, but their summation of the political
situation is not.
“The
Lecornu II government,” said National Rally President Jordan Bardella, “is a
bad joke, a democratic disgrace, and a humiliation for the French people.”
Sarah
Paillou, Victor Goury-Laffont, Tim Ross, Geoffrey Smith and Anthony Lattier
contributed to this report.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário